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de Vil in the novel, spelled De Vil by Disney) is a character created by Dodie Smith as his main novel's antagonist 1956 < i> The Hundred and One Dalmatians and in the adaptation of the Walt Disney Pictures animated film <101 Dalmatians (1961), 101 Dalmatians II: The London Patch Adventure (2003) and the adaptation of live-action Disney movies <101> Dalmatians (1996) and 102 Dalmatians (2000).

She was originally voiced by Betty Lou Gerson, after which she was voiced by April Winchell (TV series), Tress MacNeille (TV series, two episodes), and Susanne Blakeslee (currently) and portrayed directly by Glenn Close (< 101 Dalmatians and 102 Dalmatians, Rachel York (musical), Victoria Smurfit ( Once Upon a Time ), and Wendy Raquel Robinson ( The Descent ).

The character becomes a type of pop culture symbolizes a very, very meaningful person. Cruella ranked 39th in the AFI "100 Years... 100 Heroes and Criminals" list.


Video Cruella de Vil



Name

The name Cruella is the words of the cruel and the devil , a metaphor emphasized by having the country house nicknamed "Hall of Hell". In some translations, for example in Polish, Cruella De Vil is known as "Cruella De Mon", a drama about "demons". In Italian, he is called "Crudelia De Mon" (the name "crudele", cruel, and "devil", devil). In the French translation of the Disney animated film, he is referred to as "Cruella D'Enfer" (Literally, Cruella of Hell or from Hell). In Holland, the name remains "De Vil", while by chance the Dutch verb to skinning is "Villen" and "Vil" is the conjugation of this verb to the first person singular. In the Brazilian and Portuguese translations, Cruella is known as the "Cruela Cruel", which originally started from "cruel".

The name "de Vil" is also a literary allusion to Bram Stoker Dracula (1897). In the novel, realty company Mitchell, Sons & amp; Candy wrote a letter, dated October 1, to Lord Godalming, telling her that the buyer of a house in Piccadilly, London was "a foreign nobleman, Prince De Ville." Count De Ville, however, proved to be an alias for Count Dracula himself.

It is also believed that the inspiration for the name began in 1939 when Dodie Smith bought a new 25/30 Rolls-Royce "Sedanca de Ville" where he and his pet Dalmatian "Pongo" often traveled, which also formed the basis of cartoon images of Cruella's own car.

Maps Cruella de Vil



Appearance

Novel Hundred One Dalmatians

In the original story, Cruella is portrayed as a pampered and glamorous London heiress who knows Dalmatian puppies from school, although it is said that they are not friends and that she is afraid of a respectable little Lady. He was a student who threatened with black and white, and was expelled for a drink of ink. However, he seemed more friendly with Mrs. Dearly when they meet each other early in the novel, before Cruella stole Dearly's puppy.

In all of his incarnations, Cruella kidnaps 97 or 99 Dalmatian puppies for his fur. In the live-action version, it is revealed that the reason Cruella opts for the skin puppy is that when the short-haired dog grows older, their fur becomes very coarse, which does not sell well in the fashy fashion industry as a soft, soft puppy fur.

The One Hundred and One Dalmatians describes Cruella as his last and prosperous family, with personal wealth GBÃ, Â £ 6 million . She married a feather trader, whose first name was never mentioned, even by Cruella, and apparently she married her solely for her work rather than because she loved him. When Mrs. Dearly asked Cruella what her marriage was, Cruella replied that - in contrast to her usual patriarchal habits - she has made her husband adopt her family name as hers, in an attempt to pass on her family name. She and her husband have no children. Cruella is described as a tyrannical figure in marriage, and her husband as a gentle man, who rarely speaks and obeys his wife completely. She supplies Cruella in extra clothes, like the white fur coat she often wears with tight satin dresses and contrasting gems, like a black dress with a pearl string, or a green dress with a rope. The car driven by the black-and-white-striped Cruella, which Mr. Dearly as a "moving zebra crossing", and Cruella boasts that he has the loudest horns in London, which he insists on sounding for Dearly couples.

When Cruella has a guest for dinner, all the food is a strange color and tastes very spicy. When Mr. Dearly commented he might find his cotton mantle too warm for a summer's night, Cruella laughed that he had never found anything too warm; he keeps roaring fire and complains of the cold despite the unbearable heat. This flat is described as a luxury version of Hell, with all rooms made of marble and stained with green, red or purple. His guests also encounter his abused white Persian cat which Cruella admits he hates and just continues because of the cat's worth.

When invited to a dinner party hosted by her dear couple, Cruella expressed her frightening interest in the Dalmatians, remarking how she and her spearheaded husband never thought about making clothes from a pelt dog before. However, looking at the skins of the newborn puppies, he rebelled and offered them to drown at once; how to get rid of the animals he sees as worthless, including his dozens of kittens. After her second visit home, she picked up the adult puppies and treated them like clothes to wear.

Cruella also made a brief appearance, despite falling asleep, in the sequel to Dodie Smith The Starlight Barking .

Animated movie

The Disney animated version of Cruella first appeared in 1961 One Hundred and One Dalmatians , where he was voiced by Betty Lou Gerson and animated by Marc Davis who together made him an iconic and memorable character. Disney based on Cruella's version of personality and behavior from Tallulah Bankhead. The cool detachment of the original character is replaced by a crazy mania, where Cruella just barely attaches to the glamorous sheen. For reasons unexplained, Cruella's cat and husband were omitted from the Disney version. Cruella drove a very distinctive car, red and black, based on the 1936 Alvis Speed ​​20 Drophead Coupe SD.

In the film, Cruella has become rich from the collection of his big fur coat, and consequently rough and spoiled. She mocks Anita Radcliffe and her husband, Roger, for earning a living from songwriting. Cruella wants to make a fur coat from Dalmatians Radcliffe, and promises to return in three weeks to collect the puppies when they are born. After the night of the birth of the puppy, Cruella is initially anxious to find their coat completely clean, but cheers when Anita tells her that the spots will appear within weeks. Cruella made an offer to buy the puppies, while taunting Roger for his songwriting career and splashing Roger and Pongo in ink from his pen. However, when Roger firmly states that his children are not for sale, he desperately ends his friendship with Anita and storms out, swearing vengeance.

A few weeks later, two thieves named Jasper and Horace managed to steal the puppies when Radcliffes came out. While Cruella was questioned about the theft, the police could find nothing to fight him, and Anita did not want to collect it, regardless of Rogers's doubts. However, as the days passed, the police still suspected him, so he hid in his big house, Hell Hall in Suffolk, where Jasper and Horace and the puppies were, proving that he was the mastermind behind the theft. He demanded that his men kill and skin his sons during the night before ferociously leaving the house. The next morning, Cruella learns that the puppies have escaped from the house at night and he and his men begin a dangerous search for puppies on the snow country roads through the Cruella and Jasper and Horace roadsters that struck the truck. Cruella yelled at Jasper and Horace for reckless driving, though his driving skills were definitely worse. The next day, on Christmas Eve, Cruella, Jasper, and Horace realize that the puppies have fled to Dinsford and they start looking there. As he drove through town, he saw a long procession of black puppies walking past him into a van. Realizing at the last minute that the puppies are the undercover Dalmatians, he chases the van in his car as he leaves town. Cruella tries to hit a van on a cliff, but collides with Jasper and Horace in their truck. The three criminals dropped a steep mountain and landed in the cold snow in the ruins of the car. Cruella wept for losing her dream coat and Jasper told her to shut up.

The film features a song, written by Mel Leven, using his name as the title, sung by Dalmatians' owner Roger (Bill Lee), who holds the woman in disgust. The lyrics begin with: "Cruella de Vil, Cruella de Vil.. If he does not scare you, there's no evil thing to be..."

Walt Disney's early vision for The Rescuers (1977) revolves around the abduction of a polar bear from a city zoo; the author considers reusing Cruella as the main antagonist (probably driven by his desire for a bear feather). The idea was dismissed when the source for the storyline changed, and Disney did not want to make a sequel to an unrelated movie. Cruella is back in 101 Dalmatians II: The London Patch Adventure once again as the main antagonist, in which she is now voiced by Susanne Blakeslee. Blakeslee also voiced Cruella on Disney's House of Mouse , which featured a joke in which he inspected dogs from other Disney movies with gauges. He also appeared on Mickey's House of Villains. Cruella appeared in the animation once again at Disney's Christmas Favorites during the "Santa Cruella" segment. Cruella is also one of the Disney Villains Mickey fights in Disney's Hollywood Studios version of Fantasmic! Nighttime Show Spectacular at Walt Disney World. At Disney On Ice play "Celebrations," Cruella is one of the Villains that appeared during the Halloween Party.

From an obscure symbolic name to a spooky physical appearance, Cruella's crime is blatant. In 2002, Forbes ranked Cruella as the thirteenth richest fictional character, citing a 65-year-old man with a net worth of $ 875 million, earned by inheritance. Cruella is listed as the 39th biggest criminal in American cinema in AFI 100 Years... 100 Heroes and Criminals. Also, at Disney's Top 30 Disney Villains Countdown, Cruella ranks # 6.

Live action movie

Glenn Close describes Cruella de Vil in the 1996 film 101 Dalmatians and its 2000th sequel <102 Dalmatians . The film re-creates Cruella as the king of fashion haute couture, pompous and very glamorous, " House of DeVil ", specializing in fur couture. Anita's character (played by Joely Richardson) is a couturiÃÆ'¨re and employee of De Vil. Unlike animated films, the live-action version gives the reason why Cruella wants to make puppies into a coat at a young age, is that their fur will not be as soft as they grow up. At the beginning of the film, he reveals that Cruella has secretly been his accomplice massacring the white Siberian tiger at the London Zoo for his pelt. However, the suspicions and accusations of the esteemed family forced Cruella to step up his plans to get the puppy into a coat, the puppies fled while his men were preparing to do the work and Cruella was then thrown into the barrel of molasses and pigs. pen when he tried to track them to a farm. At the end of the film, he was arrested and sent to prison, with Dearlys taking over his home after the latest video game Roger proved successful when he made a criminal based on Cruella.

The film enhances the physical comedy of the animated film, even turning into teenage humor, as Cruella falls into old mole kegs. Close appearance is universally well received and its sex appeal as a character is also credited.

The live-action movie is not as successful as the animated film, but Close's appearance, as well as the costumes, by Anthony Powell and Rosemary Burrows, gets their full attention, including the spread at Vanity Fair. The claws are applied to the gloves, and the necklace is made of teeth, to add to the idea that Cruella enjoys wearing part of the dead animal. Nails are also projected from the heels to make them especially vicious in appearance. Some of her clothes are made of leather or PVC, and Cruella always wears a lot of makeup. Close has commented on how to demand a slapstick physical role of the role while wearing boots and bodice nails. She always smokes to give the appearance of a mysterious "criminal". The cap also insisted that he fall into his own cane drops to act genuine, as opposed to delegating it to a stunter.

In 102 Dalmatians , while under the influence of Dr. hypnotherapy treatment Ivan Pavlov, Cruella recovered from his fur addiction and was released from a conditional prison, three years after the first film. He insists on being called "Ella" because "Cruella sounds so... cruel". Reformed, is really aimed at saving animals, and when experiencing "doraphobia", she is frightened even by the smallest outlook of the fur fashion, especially since she has all her fur clothes and pictures of herself in a Dalmatian dog coat up. Unfortunately, this new persona did not last long because the bell effect of Big Ben successfully canceled the conditioning, restoring Cruella to her old self. During the "Ella" stage, Cruella stops his typical habit, such as wearing fur, long nails, fancy hairstyles, and of course, smoking. After Big Ben jerked his brainwaves back to Cruella, his old habits returned, with Cruella redesigning a sketch of the original Dalmatian's mantle to include a special hood so he could use three new puppies to make a coat over the required ninety-nine puppies, three additional the selected ones are the Dipstick boys, one of fifteen Dearlys native puppies. However, despite his efforts to divert attention from him by framing the owner of Second Chance Dog Shelter for his crime (the only person who would benefit if he returned to his old behavior when his parole declared that his fortune would go to a dog shelter in the Westminster area and Second Chance is the only one of these shelters), the plan was found by the parole officer, also the owner of Dipstick. His legs, Jean Pierre Le Pelt, were trapped in one of his own coats when sown during a fight in an illegal sweatshop in France, while Dipstick's daughter, Oddball (who had not yet developed his own place) lured Cruella into a trap where he actually baked into a cake and was arrested along with Le Pelt, both sentenced to life imprisonment for their actions.

The live-action Cruella de Vil movie is under development by Disney. Screenwriter Aline Brosh McKenna is best known for writing The Devil Wears Prada is set to write movies for Disney, with Andrew Gunn as producer, and Alex Timbers as director while Emma Stone is ready to play the role.

animated series

In the animated series 101 Dalmatians, Cruella is voiced by April Winchell, MacNeille Tress "Fungus Among Us" and Close But No Cigar "episodes only and based on Glenn Close's portrayal of the live action film, but with the design Betty Lou Gerson of the animated film.He is not seen wearing clothes made of animals, or smoking (though in the episode "Smoke Detector" and "Hail to the Chief" he did) and really sane. stealing the Dearlys farm from them, and using the puppies as a ransom, especially since the old widow Smedly will not sell it to her and that her mother Malevola sued her.He is an archetypal corporate villain who will utilize any scheme to make money, including drilling for oil from swamps near Dearly farms (thereby fouling it), buy Kanine Krunchies and replace nutritious ingredients with sawdust and chalk or mengir im Jasper and Horace to drive away the owner of Mom and Pop Grocery Store so he ca n bought it himself.

In the Christmas episode, "A Christmas Cruella", since she was a child, Cruella wants a Dalmatian dog, but her parents always go on holiday, leaving her with foreign nannies and clothes for gifts. During her teenage years, it was the last straw that gave her a half white hairline in her anger (previously, she was seen with all black hair and a little gray line). It was his sad childhood that prompted him to be evil.

The series is also the first time Cruella uses seduction as one of his evil schemes. In the final series, he uses an inflatable body suit to disguise himself as a sexy blonde bikini surfer to seduce Roger so that Anita thinks she's having an affair so they'll split up and she can get the farm. When Anita goes swimming, she makes him move to her. He asked her to go swimming with her and then try to kiss her, but her suit was deflated by the puppy's rooster friend, and she turned into a surfboard.

Note: in two classic 101 Dalmatians: "Fungus Among Us" and "Close But No Cigar" Animated Series "Cruella De Vil is voiced by Tress MacNeille instead of April Winchell who usually speaks Cruella in the TV series.

Musical Broadway

Cruella also appeared as a major antagonist in the Broadway musical based on the novel. She was described by Rachel York; However, the actress announced on her blog that she had resigned from the role of Cruella de Vil to pursue another project. The role was taken over by Sara Gettelfinger.

Government Guard

Cruella first appeared in the fourth book Power Play , as a member of Overtakers. He is precious to them because he knows the ways of the modern world. Cruella works with Evil Queen to free Maleficent and Chernabog, while making sure Keeper away from their tracks. Using DHI technology, she and Queen headed for electricity and powered off facilities, allowing Maleficent and Chernabog to escape from their cells.

In the following book Shell Game , he helps Queen and Maleficent steal Walt's original record at Chernabog from Archives. He then boarded the Dream for a two-week voyage, along with the rest of Overtakers. He orders the Lion King hyena, Happy and Howley, asking them to patrol the ship to keep the Guards from finding Chernabog.

In the seventh book "The Insider", Cruella joins Tia Dalma, Queen and Judge Doom's group in Toontown; he called the animal troops to the area with a simple command. However, he was knocked out by Amanda's telekinesis. Finn then discovers that Cruella has lived in a fancy carriage compartment that was closed and tried to strangle him to death. He escapes fear, but has a wrench thrown at him. He was last seen slumped on the ground, bleeding.

Once Upon a Time

Cruella emerged as the main antagonist in the fourth and fifth seasons of the TV series Once Upon a Time, where he was described as an adult by Victoria Smurfit, and as a child by Milli Wilkinson, as a magician who has the power to control animals. A childhood sociopath, Cruella poisoned his father and two stepfathers. Her mother Madeline (Anna Galvin) keeps her locked inside the house to prevent her from harming others. As an adult, he meets Isaac (Author) (Patrick Fischler), who is disguised as an ordinary journalist; through him, he learns that his world, the 1920s England, is one of many. Fascinated by him, the author gives him the power to control animals. Cruella uses new powers to make his mother's dalmatians kill him, and kill them and make his coat into a mantle. In the struggle to prevent the Writer from writing another note about her, a magic ink bottle spilled on her causing her blond hair to turn black and white. However, the pen has ink residue in it, which writers use to write notes that will, from there, prevent Cruella from taking on another life. "Cruella De Vil can no longer take the lives of others." Cruella keeps this a secret, because intimidation will keep working for his needs.

He then ended up in Enchanted Forest, where he became famous for turning animals into outerwear. Rumplestiltskin (Robert Carlyle) recruits him, Ursula (Merrin Dungey) and Maleficent (Kristin Bauer van Straten) to get the Dark Curse. However, he multiplied them and left them to be killed by Chernabog. Escaped together, Cruella joins both in trying to get help from Snow White (Ginnifer Goodwin) and Prince Charming (Josh Dallas) in preventing Evil Queen (Lana Parrilla) from casting the curse. However, the Wisdom Tree they consulted refused to answer because of Snow's pregnancy. Along with Ursula, Cruella was asked by Maleficent to act as a guard while he was in labor as a dragon. As a result, Cruella is sucked into the portal with Ursula and the child into the Land Without Magic, due to a spell cast by The Apprentice. She and Sea Witch stole the baby's eggs and used magic to prolong their youth in a world without magic. He later married Mr. Feinberg and lived in a big house on Long Island in New York.

On this day, Cruella's marriage had collapsed when the FBI took back her husband's things. Mr. Gold and Ursula convince him to join them in searching for the Author to get a happy ending. Cruella does not play an important role in the plot, until the Author is freed from the book; unable to kill him himself, he pretends to threaten the life of Henry Mills (Jared S. Gilmore) to force Emma Swan (Jennifer Morrison) and Regina to do so. However, Emma confronts him, not knowing the restrictions that Entrepreneurs placed on Cruella, and magically blew him off the cliff into his death.

After his death, Cruella ends up in the Underworld, a purgatory run by the god Hades. While there, he meets David James's twin sister; they quickly start a romantic relationship because of their same personality. When the heroes arrived with Gold to rescue Killian Jones who had just died (Colin O'Donoghue), Cruella was among those who died where they came. In hopes of returning to life, Cruella begs Henry, the new Author, to use a quill to revive it. Later, she helps Regina find the lost love grave, Daniel, who has since moved to a better place. Having misinterpreted David for James, Cruella made a move to him, then told him about James's hostility toward his brother. Cruella and James then hatch a plan to get out of the Underworld by giving Hades a son Robin Hood and Zelena. James pretends to be David and makes a bracelet that neutralizes the magic on Emma, ​​while he and Cruella take the baby. They take Emma and Robin to the dock, planning to throw them into the River of Lost Souls, until David and Hook stop them. David finally threw James into the River and Cruella ran away.

As soon as Hades's heart restarts, and he plans to leave the Underworld with Zelena, Cruella works with the Blind Witch; Hades offers to let them rule the Underworld in his absence and help trap the heroes there. Pleased with the idea of ​​tormenting the soul forever, Cruella agreed to the deal.

After escaping from heroes to Storybrooke, Hook teamed up with the deceased King Arthur to find a book of stories so they could tell Emma how to defeat Hades. They go to look for Cruella at the restaurant, where she reacts with disgust at Hook, but she shyly assumes Arthur with an interest in her handsomeness. When asked about the haunted booth, Cruella confessed he destroyed it for good, because he did not want anyone to move if it meant he had to be stuck in the Underworld as well. Hook then urges him about the existence of the book, which is surprisingly surprising about Cruella. He knew they would eventually know the truth even if he lied, and then told them that he put the book in the River of Souls. Cruella was later overthrown by Arthur who then ruled the Underworld for fifty years as he became a depressed and bitter woman who drank in a local bar with Sir Mordred.

In the seventh season, the Wish Realm version of Cruella became Rumplestiltskin's accomplice.

offspring

Cruella De Vil appeared on Disney Channel's Original Movie 2015 Descendants . She is portrayed by actress Wendy Raquel Robinson. Along with other criminals, Cruella has been exiled to the Isle of the Lost, where he has lived for at least twenty years. He has a 14-year-old son, Carlos, who is abused and treated like a maid, putting him to sleep near a bear trap he uses to keep his fur coat.

Hayden Williams Fashion Illustrations | Cruella de Vil collection ...
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In popular culture

Cruella de Vil has become one of the most recognizable literary and film villains, and as prominently featured in popular culture:

  • The Queen song "Let Me Entertain You" features the lyrics "I'll Cruella de Vil You!"
  • Children's Song 18: 3 "The Cruel One" is about 101 Dalmatians and mentions Cruella de Vil by name in chorus.
  • The Deadsy "Cruella" is written about Cruella de Vil.
  • In the episode Hey Arnold! "Curly's Girl", when Rhonda broke with Curly after pretending to be her boyfriend, Helga called it "Cruella".
  • The rock band The Replacements recorded the cover of "Cruella de Vil" for a Disney cover compilation. It also appears in All for Nothing/Nothing for Everyone .
  • In the 1998 remake of The Parent Trap , Hallie Parker told her mother that her father married a woman as cruel as Cruella de Vil.
  • The Spanish singer Alaska made cover of the song "Cruella de Vil" for the live-action version of Dalmatians version 101 of the Spanish version.
  • Singer and teen singer Selena Gomez redid the song, based on a song from Disney's 101 Dalmatians. Similarly, Blues Pianist and Dr. Vocalist. John performed Big Band cover for Disney's Greatest Hits album; which included the cover of the 1961 classic song.
  • Mark Campbell (from Jack Mack and Heart Attack fame) sings a funky "Cruella De Vil" in the movie '102 Dalmatians,' and in the Disney Soundtrack 2000 Album.
  • American singer and player Lady Gaga dressed up as Cruella de Vil for Halloween in 2010. Her appearance has had many clothes inspired by criminals.
  • The inflatable character representation appeared at the opening ceremony of the 2012 Summer Olympics in London with Lord Voldemort, Queen of Hearts, Captain Hook, and Child Catcher to commemorate the importance of children's literature to British culture.
  • In Lois & amp; Clark: The New Adventures of Superman , the tabloids once published a story accusing Lois Lane of having an affair with her husband, Clark Kent with Superman. Lois commented he was under Cruella on a scale of popularity.
  • Singer Melanie Martinez colored her half blond hair, in the same tone as Cruella.
  • EDM Duo Krewella has got the name of one of the members spelled the word "cruella".

Parody

In the episode of "Two Dozen and One Greyhounds", Mr. Burns plays the role of Cruella De Vil, but unlike him in the movie, where he stole a Dalmatian puppy to make it into a fur coat, he stole Santa's Little Helper and the puppies he's arranged to make them into tuxedos. And unlike Cruella, who did not hesitate to kill the puppies, Burns did not have the heart to kill his own children, because they were too cute. Declaring that he will never kill an animal that can do any good tricks again, Burns pays Simpsons for puppies, and he trains them to become world class dog racing. This episode also includes a parody of the song, "Be Our Guest" from other Disney movies Beauty and the Beast .

Coco LaBouche, the antagonist of the 2000 Rugrats Rugrats in Paris spin-off, has some of the same characteristics as Cruella.

In episode Jessie "101 Lizard", Mrs. Chestrefield plays a similar role to Cruella de Vil.

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References


Glenn Close Cruella Devil doll custom repaint by noeling on DeviantArt
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External links

  • Cruella de Vil at UltimateDisney.com Villains Countdown
  • Cruella de Vil in Disney Archive

Source of the article : Wikipedia

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